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Incident Reporting to RIAs: A Journey

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Introduction

In February 2007, just a few months after earning my BSc., I was hired by a local custom software development company to assist in the development of several large-scale applications for the international airport, as well as enhancing an internal item-tracking system with ASP.NET.  Using ColdFusion, MS SQL, and the Model-View-Controller architecture it was my duty to help build applications that either managed money or managed incidents.  It was a massive learning experience that I had thought weathered me to the storm of professional software development. However, when the company closed its doors over a year later due, I became quickly aware of how very little I had scratched the surface.

After several intense and interesting interviews at several different organizations, I pursued one position which preferred me to specialize in PHP.

Having only seen PHP and never utilized it, I was apprehensive about pursuing the choice. However, after two interviews and a telephone conference later, it was clear to me they found more interest in me than just my passing knowledge of PHP, but rather in my experience in Object-Oriented Programming (OOP).

A Whole New Can of Worms

Day one on the job opened up a Pandora’s box of research, troubleshooting, and headaches.  I was assigned as an Adobe Flex developer. My requirement was to design, maintain, and enhance an administration tool for a high-profile website in tandem with another developer who was much more experience in the architecture and ActionScript than I was.  The most I’d seen of Flash development was at least five years ago and I made a ball roll across the screen. Needless to say, programmatic development in this language was alien to me.

The most challenging part about this new position was a few things:

  1. The job centered around a single site and proposed future sites
  2. I had never developed any sort of graphical Flash application or otherwise
  3. The usefulness of knowledgeable people was sadly stunted by over-inflated egos

Challenges aside, I toughed out the first month and suddenly found myself really getting the idea behind graphical development. Funny enough, learning the language was the easiest part of the transition, it was everything else that was difficult.

Developing a flash-based image cropping tool was probably the biggest mouthful I’d had to digest in my professional career. At my previous job, there was hardly a task I would’ve had to scratch my head over by the time of my departure, and now in the first week of this one I’ve got the biggest head-scratcher a head’s ever seen.

Once the tool was developed it was integrated into the Cairngorm architecture of our Flash application (a relatively simple MVC system which simplifies scalability), and I was onto my next task.

Unit Testing as a Pioneer

Show of hands on who’s developed unit tests for an application? (probably a good number)

Show of hands on who’s developed unit tests in Cairngorm? (probably a much smaller number, but thank God for FlexUnit)

Show of hands on who’s developed unit tests in Cairngorm to test asynchronous service calls via amfphp? (Oh god, am I the only one?)

Needless to say my next task was nearly as trying as the first, but I was determined to make it happen.

For anyone new to Cairngorm and especially to the idea of testing asynchronous calls to a service, it’s important to remember that not everything anyone else says is right for your application. I’ve tried numerous methods in order to get a proper test done and only after about 3 weeks was a half-solution decided upon.

First and foremost, read through every word of Steven Webster’s starter guide to Flex and Cairngorm and familiarize yourself with the setup, and be absolutely certain you’ve followed his guidelines for developing your application. The next step is to grab FlexUnit, a wonderful testing suite written by the good folks at Adobe to help test-driven developers like myself build a better system.

Once FlexUnit’s installed, look at your code and commence the head-scratching.

Look to part 2 of this entry for some actual code and suggestions to assist your testing needs.

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Written by everynerd

July 13th, 2008 at 10:46 pm

One Response to 'Incident Reporting to RIAs: A Journey'

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  1. [...] Flex specifically, one such architecture is Cairngorm, which has been described here a few times. But as easy as it is to manage important events in the application, even the best [...]




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